Fame Is Fleeting, Even for the Famous

            Thank goodness it’s gone.

            When a recent essay of mine appeared here, my photo appeared with it. When asked if that would be all right, I agreed. Why not, after all, my face has appeared next to my columns before, so sure, what the heck. I now know that other contributors are obviously more humble and smarter than I. So, dear reader, I apologize to anyone whose day may have been ruined by stumbling upon my aged countenance. I had no desire to offend. I should have known better.

            It didn’t take long after my face appeared that one wag said they thought it was for my obituary. At least he wasn’t offended. Oh, the price of fame. This is not the first time my mug has been recognized.

            Once a gentleman approached me and asked if I was the fellow who wrote in the newspaper. “Yes,” I responded. Whereupon he lambasted me up one side and down the other for having offended him and demanded an apology. Not knowing this person or what offense I had committed, I nevertheless apologized profusely, discretion being the better part of valor.

            After a while, one builds up a defense to strangers approaching you, wagging their fingers inquiring about something I had written. My first thought is always to look for the baseball bat they may have hidden behind their back. One time however, my defense was premature. A white-haired older lady approached me in a library. She believed she had recognized someone she knew. I had written about a favorite teacher of mine in elementary school.

            I described the teacher as “Mr. K,” who was my sixth-grade teacher. I said he was a bear of a man with a little head and a mischievous grin who waddled rather than walked. He always wore a suit jacket that hung to his knees, or so it seemed. About once a week he would pick up and hold unruly students upside-down by their ankles – always boys, girls wore skirts in those days – until all the “truck” (miscellaneous small articles of little value) fell out of their pockets. The class would roar with laughter.

            Apparently, my description was right on point because she was sure she had attended graduate school with him. She was right, even though Mr. Kennedy taught in our own Mattapoisett Center School some 40 years earlier and 80 miles from that library.

            I expect that sometime well-known people might wish they were recognized. An example of that happened right here in our own little village. Before there was a 7-Eleven and Dunkin Donuts near old Salty the Seahorse and before a Salvation Army outlet store vacated the location, there was an A&P grocery store.

            A United States senator had a vacation home in our area where he came each weekend, presumably to get away from the madness in Washington. While driving from Connecticut one Friday evening, the senator stopped into the A&P to purchase some groceries. Being the busy man that he was with no doubt much on his mind, he forgot to bring his wallet with his identification on the drive north. Not until he reached the checkout counter did he realize his omission. His personal check was rejected, despite his protests and pleadings because it was from out of state. He left his bag of groceries on the counter and departed.

            An old friend of mine, who worked at the A&P, claimed that all the while the encounter was taking place, the evening news was playing on the television in the manager’s office with the senator’s face front and center. Not until later did anyone realize that a participant in one of America’s historic episodes was in their midst.

            The entire encounter was later confirmed to be true when Senator Lowell Weicker, a member of the infamous Watergate Committee, retold the tale in a speech at a United States Press Club luncheon in Washington, noting that the adventure took place in Mattapoisett, Massachusetts.

            Sometimes having your face in the paper can work in your favor. When I ran for a local elected position some years back, my recognition factor increased exponentially. To my surprise, I won the election.

            This time however, as Mark Twain is reputed to have said, “Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated.”

            Editor’s note: Mattapoisett resident Dick Morgado is an artist and retired newspaper columnist whose musings are, after some years, back in The Wanderer under the subtitle “Thoughts on ….” Morgado’s opinions have also appeared for many years in daily newspapers around Boston.

Thoughts on…

By Dick Morgado

Town Looking to Slow Septic Requirement

            The Rochester Board of Health on December 7 reviewed a draft letter that will request “slowing down” the implementation of proposed new and potentially expensive state septic-system installation regulations.

            Town Health Director Karen Walega said the Department of Environmental Protection is proposing to require nitrogen-reduction systems for even existing septic systems. This new regulation, she said, would require costly system upgrades or require the town to apply for a Watershed Area designation permit.

            The latter would give the town 20 years to see where the water-polluting nitrogen is coming from, she said. This complicated, equally expensive process would have to succeed at reducing the pollutant.

            Otherwise, even the elderly and homeowners on fixed incomes would have to pay up to $50,000 above their other septic-system costs for a new mechanical system including denitrification technology. And that does not include the electricity to run the new fan-based systems, roughly $70 to $80 per month.

            The new system has only gotten “provisional” approval from the DEP, Walega said. Yet the DEP is speeding through the new regulation’s approval process; the current implementation target date is January 3, 2023.

            The town, explained Walega, needs to request the state slow down with that process until more information can be gathered. “We need to all sit down with the DEP,” she said. “We need to slow this down and everyone have a seat at the table to discuss this.”

            Board of Health Chairman David Souza and the other members agreed to have a final draft of its letter to the state ready to be sent by early this week. “There are other systems like it that don’t cost as much and might work more efficiently,” Souza said. “We’ve got to slow them down.”

            Walega noted that while the south coast is being targeted in Phase One of the state’s plan, “This is a state-wide problem,” she said. A Conservation Law Foundation lawsuit regarding high nitrogen pollution in the state’s groundwater is a main reason for this action, she added. “But towns have been called to the table for their input. … Rochester has 2,900 homes. How will we finance that many homeowners? Financially, people just can’t do it.”

            “I’m all for protecting the environment,” Souza said. “But we have to use common sense.”

            Elsewhere on the December 7 agenda, the Board of Health approved a percolation-rate variance to allow the building of a home and farmstand at the 58.5-acre Elliot Farm on Marion Road.

            Souza said the soil there is in “beautiful” condition but will need a lot of fill because it is not too far from land that is wet. He and fellow board members said they were very much in favor of seeing this property developed as planned.

            Also, the board approved the $6,800 recycling/landfill contract with Tighe and Bond for next year.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Health is scheduled for Wednesday, January 4, 2023, at 4:00 pm in the Town Hall Meeting Room, 1 Constitution Way, Rochester.

Rochester Board of Health

By Michael J. DeCicco

Ten-Bay Garage Brings out Abutters

            The Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals opened a public hearing on December 8 into a plan to build an 80×204-foot steel building with 10 separate bays and 16,320 square feet of floor space at 19 Country Road. But the board could not even come close to rendering a decision.

            Neighbors who are so concerned about the scale of the plan that they hired an attorney, expressed objections that led the petitioners Robert and Christine Murphy to request a continuance to January 26.

            The Murphys said they were blindsided by their neighbors’ reaction and wanted more time to be better prepared, including contacting their own attorney. They said the neighbors seemed okay with their plan to build a garage when the couple first discussed it with them. “We had no idea they were upset with this plan,” Christine Murphy said.

            Robert Murphy started the hearing by noting the first of his two requests before the Zoning panel is for a special permit to rent this garage space to people who are already storing items on his large property. He would fill the other parts of the garage with his own equipment and his race cars so he could store them and work on them in the winter. His other request before the panel is a variance to run his trucking company with up to three employees there.

            Attorney Michael Kennefick, representing several of the abutters, countered that the proposed use does not belong where it is being planned. The site is in a residential-agricultural zone, and it is surrounded by neighbors. There is a junkyard that is an isolated, non-agricultural use in that area, but Murphy’s trucking company is an unlawful operation in that location, Kennefick asserted.

            To buttress his argument, Kennefick noted a use approved by the ZBA “must be in harmony with the intent of the town bylaw. The number of neighbors here proves this would not be in harmony.”

            Abutter Amy Bennett, 9 County Road, said she and her husband Kevin have a “medically delicate,” wheelchair-bound child. “I’m concerned about what this does to all our lives,” she said. “We have a brand-new deck. From it, we see wrecked vehicles and all the trucks. There’ll be more noise; more trucks will come and go. I never thought I’d be here to stop an industrial use in a residential area. And it will devalue our property. This is really too much.”

            Christine Murphy said she had thought she and her husband had a great relationship with the neighbors. She said they have helped them with their own projects. They are cleaning up their property that the neighbors see from their yards. The new building, she said, “is going to block looking at that junkyard.”

            Board Chairman Thomas Flynn encouraged the Murphys to talk to the neighbors as well as their lawyer before January 26.

            In other action, the Zoning panel approved a setback-requirement variance at 3 County Road to allow the building of a 20×16-foot deck closer than the required 40 feet from the side setback. Board members acknowledged in their motion that the size of the house lot and the location of the septic system would make it a hardship to place the deck elsewhere on the lot.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals is scheduled for Thursday, December 22, at 7:15 pm in the Town Hall meeting room, 1 Constitution Way, Rochester.

Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals

By Michael J. DeCicco

From the Files of the Rochester Historical Society

            One of the hazards of reading through historical articles and news clippings is how easy it is to get sidetracked. Some interesting item pops up, and 20 minutes later, you are still engrossed in something totally unrelated to what you were planning to research. There’s a very thick book in our museum collection titled, “Anthony Coombs and Dorcas Woodin of Rochester, Massachusetts, Their origins and descendants”. Anthony Coombs has been mentioned previously as he operated Rochester’s first blacksmith shop and forge in the area of East Over. I was interested in knowing more about him.

            The book is essentially a genealogical history of the Coombs family in New England. The author starts off by saying that more than 30 immigrants with the name of Coombs immigrated to New England and that most did not share our Anthony’s family line. Here is where I went astray. They might not have been related, but they were interesting. One of the first was Hardman Coombs who “was found by a British frigate in an open boat off Sequin Island with five women and no oars”. Boy, would I like to know more about that story. This occurred around 1607 and north of the Kennebec River in what is today Maine.

            There was an Isaac Coombs who showed up in Weymouth in 1632; John Coombs who arrived in Plymouth in 1630 and Henry Coombs who was in Salem and Marblehead in 1635. There’s more information on Peter Coombs who was in Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1670-1675. He was a blacksmith and was prohibited from “frequenting of publique houses of entertainment upon the penaltie of law”. He went on to serve in the Salem militia during King Philip’s War.

            A connection to the Coombs that I was supposed to be researching shows up related to Maine, and now I’ll digress again. In 1652, Massachusetts Bay Colony claimed Maine under a 1628 charter. Over the ensuing years, Maine’s status was frequently changing. An independent government was set up in 1666, but two years later, it was again under Massachusetts control. In 1691, a Massachusetts charter given by William and Mary designated Maine as a district of Massachusetts, and since Maine was essentially a less crowded part of Massachusetts, quite a few early settlers in our area also owned land there.

            An Alistair Coombs, who took an oath of allegiance to the King of England in 1665, claimed a large tract of land in today’s Brunswick, Maine. There is some thought that he might be a relative of Anthony Coombs because between 1730 and 1750, four of Anthony’s sons along with grandchildren bought land in the same area.

            Wells, York County, Province of Massachusetts Bay Colony is where we finally meet up with our Rochester Anthony who was born Antoine Coombs in 1661. He appeared in New England along with another Frenchman. In 1688, he married his neighbor, Dorcas Woodin. Because Maine was dangerous during parts of the French and Indian Wars, he sent Dorcas to Massachusetts, first Essex and then Beverly and Wenham, while he stayed in Wells, Maine. He must have visited her often as they had 12 children. In the end they also had 94 grandchildren, 304 great grandchildren, 984 great-great grandchildren and on into the 5th, 6th and 7th generations.

            By 1697, he gave up on owning land in Wells and relocated his family to Sandwich where he set up a forge. By early 1700, he and Dorcas accepted the invitation from the town of Rochester to move there and set up a blacksmith shop and forge not far from the gristmill and on the outflow of the Sippican River. They were given 40 acres of land. His forge and smithy were a success, and Coombs went on to be active in town where he held several offices: town surveyor, manager of the Herring Weir at Snipatuit Pond and a tithing man. He was also one of the seven men who in 1703 signed the covenant that established the First Church of Rochester.

            In all, Anthony and Dorcas lived in Rochester for 46 years, and in that time, he was involved in 21 real estate deals and at one time owned 150 acres. There are no church records or tombstones found for either Anthony or Dorcas. It is believed that Dorcas died by 1763 at the age of 65. Anthony lived on much longer as he can be traced by his various deeds. It is likely that he died in 1754 at the advanced age of 93 after playing an important role in Rochester’s early years.

By Connie Eshbach

Nitrogen Sources Critical to State Septic Plan

            Having seen the Town of Rochester push back on the state’s winter-2023 timeframe to implement a new regulation requiring septic owners in designated nitrogen-sensitive areas to install expensive denitrification systems, Mattapoisett Board of Health Chairman Carmelo Nicolosi was eager to follow suit when the board met on December 8.

            A debate is growing as to the source of the nitrogen that is polluting the harbors along the south coast and Cape Cod.

            The effort to arrive at reliable conclusions includes surveying for a Nitrogen Sensitive Watershed Study and discussions with the state Department of Environmental Protection about funding the work.

            According to Mattapoisett Land Trust President Mike Huguenin, the mouth of the Mattapoisett River is “very degraded.” A new map produced in 2021 indicates that 50 acres of eel grass has been lost to the mouth of the river and is now “mud flat” according to Huguenin, who recommended the board consult with Buzzards Bay expert Joe Costa.

            In answer to Nicolosi’s question as to any uniformity of results from water testing for nitrogen, Huguenin indicated that going back 20 to 30 years, nitrogen levels were higher in places such as Tub Mill Brook. While up-river nitrogen levels are now somewhat lower, the levels in the harbor itself are trending slightly upward. The data, said Huguenin, is subject to interpretation. “Depends on how you squint at it,” he said.

            While MassDEP is not backing off its timeline for implementation, certain things must happen first that could leverage delays. For instance, the Town of Fairhaven has yet to identify a nitrogen-sensitive area, a task that could delay implementation anywhere from 18 months to two years.

            Fairhaven, along with host Mattapoisett, Marion and to a lesser extent Rochester, is a member of the Mattapoisett River Valley Water District. When the state identifies nitrogen-sensitive areas, it will look at watershed districts.

            The monthly public meetings of the MRV’s Water Supply Protection Advisory Committee and District Commission were to be held on Tuesday.

            While the Environmental Protection Agency has yet to implement a total maximum daily load (TMDL), Nasketucket Bay State Reservation is expected to become the first Mattapoisett area targeted by the state’s septic plan, followed by Aucoot Cove and Mattapoisett Harbor. Any watershed that integrates towns, golf courses and sewerage will be evaluated.

            Bob Field of Field Engineering has been hired by the town to conduct testing and mapping to determine Mattapoisett’s major nitrogen sources, be it farms, septic systems or birds. To finance the research and field work, the town will try to secure some grant funding.

            In other business, the board approved two applications for projects on residential properties. The board granted a variance to allow a 3.6-foot separation from the groundwater table to the base of the septic system at 108 Acushnet Road and approved the relocation of a septic system to the rear of a house on Randall Road.

            The board also discussed a lack of adequate feedback regarding a potential, regional recycling center at the town’s transfer station off Tinkham Hill Road.

            Earlier this year, a private company visited the transfer station to propose the center it would finance and build, inviting residents in surrounding municipalities to participate. The host town holds the first right of refusal in processing food waste up to the capacity allowed at the site.

            State mandates are on the horizon that would require shipping food waste out of town, a costly exercise and one that local taxpayers would not be able to control.

            Finally, the board approved Health Agent Gail Joseph’s proposed policy on the use of its truck, along with associated expenses and reimbursements.

            The next public meeting of the Mattapoisett Board of Health was not set upon adjournment.

Mattapoisett Board of Health

By Mick Colageo

Eagle Project Will Combat ‘EEE’

The December 12 meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission was one of those rare occasions when a municipal board gets to hear from the youth in the community. Coming before the commission on this night was Boy Scout Murray Copps to discuss his Eagle project.

            Copps has secured permission from various private-property owners, whose holdings include marshlands, to install bird boxes for Tree Swallows.

            Marshy areas are the species’ preferred nesting site. Copps said that the birds feed on mosquitos, which carry Eastern Equine Encephalitis (“Triple E.”) He went on to say that Tree Swallows are a bird species “in decline,” his point being that the establishment of nesting boxes not only helps the birds but us as well.

            Conservation Commission Chairman Mike King called it a great project and good idea, while noting that the commission appreciated learning about the project but that permissions were not necessary, as long as the property owners gave permission. “This falls under wildlife enhancement,” he pointed out.

            Copps said the plan is to install approximately 12 boxes 40 feet apart while standing 5 feet above the marshes. He said the project will be completed by mid-January.

            In other business, a Notice of Intent filed by McGrath Realty Trust, 0 Cove Street, for the construction of a gravel parking area was continued until January 9. Bob Field of Field Engineering, representing the McGraths, was asked to submit a formalized plan that included the removal of boulders and a remediation planting plan.

            Three certificates of compliance were issued to Armand Cortellesso, Brandt Point Road Builders LLC. Cortellesso will receive the signed releases after confirmation by the commission’s agent that site clean-up and proper positioning of wetlands signage has taken place.

            An After the Fact Request for Determination of Applicability filed by John Romanelli, 15 Howard Beach, received a negative determination.

            The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for Monday, January 9, at 6:30 pm.

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

By Marilou Newell

Marion Lagoon Lining Project

Rep. Bill Straus (D-Mattapoisett) announced that the Town of Marion will be receiving an additional $250,000 from the Department of Environmental Protection for the Marion Lagoon Lining project. In 2018, Rep. Straus authored a targeted legislative earmark to the Environmental funding bill to secure funding for the lagoon relining. 

            “This project in Marion is an environmental plus for the town and Buzzards Bay. I am glad to have successfully helped the town secure this added state funding for an additional $250,000 to help defray the costs borne by sewer users in Marion. This vital project provides the benefit of a better sewer treatment facility in Marion,” said Rep. Straus.

            The original 2018 state funding authorization was for $2 million and with this payment, Marion will have received $1,250.000. The town can expect to receive this disbursement from DEP during the current fiscal year.  Rep. Straus will continue to work with the Town and DEP to ensure that all available funds are released during future fiscal years.

Search for Town Administrator Underway

After Bernie Lynch of Community Paradigm Associates explained that “the numbers we used to see for these jobs have been cut by at least a third” and told the story of a recent search that yielded 13 candidates, only one of whom had been a town manager, the challenge facing a smaller town like Marion became clear.

            The Marion Town Administrator Screening Committee held a public meeting on December 8 to officially launch its part in the search for a replacement for Jay McGrail, who left last month to become town manager in Middleborough, a town of five times Marion’s population.

            “The town administrator for a 4,000 population is the same as a town manager for 25,000, so that’s where we’re coming into the problem,” said Select Board Chairman Randy Parker.

            Noting that Marion had 39 applicants the last time, Parker was eager to add that McGrail was not in the first batch of applicants for the job. He told the committee he believes one among those 39 has once again applied.

            Marion, according to Lynch, fits the entry-level profile for candidates. The committee’s job is to work with Lynch in whittling down the list to bring two to four finalists to the Select Board.

            “After that, there really isn’t a way to get candidates before the board,” said Lynch. “You can give all the resumes to the Select Board, but then they go public … their jobs can be in jeopardy so (the screening process) helps get the best candidates possible.”

            Some towns, explained Lynch, form screening, search and selection committees, but the process is the same as almost all other searches that Community Paradigm Associates has conducted based on his vast background of 40-plus years in town management.

            Lynch was town manager in Chelmsford, then city manager in Lowell for almost eight years, double the average town-manager tenure. Lowell is the state’s fifth most-populated city behind Cambridge.

            In 2014, Lynch left Lowell to pursue other interests, including teaching, consulting, government- relations work and recruitment.

            He has taught political science at UMass Lowell and joined Suffolk University to teach a local-government certification program in an effort to try to develop a new generation of town administrators. McGrail came out of the program.

            “Jay is really one of the good students that we had come through,” said Lynch, who is seeing several now finding jobs. “I think there might be a couple in this batch of candidates.”

            According to Lynch, Community Paradigm Associates has conducted over 90 searches in Massachusetts since 2015. It is the state’s most active recruiting firm, according to Lynch, and has led the way to more town management hires than all other firms put together.

            Lynch personally led the search that yielded McGrail, and he will once again lead this search. He said the last five years have seen mostly retirements among town managers. Generation-X, he said, did not choose government as a career.

            “That’s created a hole,” Lynch said, but was optimistic having previewed the initial group of applicants for Marion’s opening. “There are some very good candidates here.”

            Once the Screening Committee recommends finalists, Community Paradigm Associates will contact references and conduct background checks. Initial steps have already begun. Unless the Select Board sees fit to call back the Screening Committee, its work is completed once the finalists are chosen.

            Marion Finance Director/Town Accountant Judy Mooney is serving as interim town administrator.

            Parker was voted chairman of the Screening Committee and Zoning Board of Appeals Chairperson Cynthia Callow to serve as clerk. The other members of the committee are Building Commissioner Bob Grillo, Finance Committee member Jay Pateakos and citizen at large Mike Sudofsky.

            After Lynch finished answering questions from the committee, the members entered executive session to review resumes.

            The committee did not set a date for its next meeting upon adjournment.

Marion Town Administrator Screening Committee

By Mick Colageo

Mattapoisett Celebrates the Season

December 10 was a grand day in Mattapoisett, in spite of the misty precipitation and gray skies. Two holiday events brought out community members in celebration. At noontime, a vocal concert was held in the reading room of the Mattapoisett Library.

            Opera singers from the Seaglass Theater performers delighted a standing-room-only crowd. Comprised of soprano Patrice Tiedemann, who is also the artistic director, Mezzo-soprano Emily Harmon, tenor Chris Hunter, baritone Paul Soper and accompanied by Dr. Matthew Larson on the piano, the musical arrangements and pitch-perfect voices brought professional luster and set the stage for the day.

            The performers, all highly talented and respected as individual singers, sang well-known holiday favorites, including show tunes with a wintery theme. As their voices soared and blended, the audience was transfixed.

            Tiedemann has been a soloist with the Boston Pops and Boston Lyric Opera. Harmon recently appeared in “White Christmas” with the New Bedford Festival Theatre and was a world finalist for Jette Parker Young Artist Program at Covent Garden in London. Hunter is a master’s candidate at the Boston University School of Music and has performed with the Los Angeles Opera. Soper’s credits include performances with the New York Opera and Lyric Stage in Boston. Larson is the music director of Seaglass Theater Company and is a faculty member of Boston University Opera Institute. He also received a Grammy Award for his work on the movie “Fantastic Mr. Fox.”

            At 3:00 pm over at Shipyard Park, families gathered for the annual holiday tree lighting and festival. A dozen local restaurants donated food for merrymakers that included everything from Asian-influenced hot dishes to casseroles with an Italian flair. There were donuts, cookies and candy for those with a sweet tooth. And, of course, hot chocolate.

            The annual event was held in partnership with the Lions Club, which collected canned foods and unwrapped toys that will be donated locally.

            And although the food and fun were a big draw, the real hit of the day was the arrival of Santa Claus on a firetruck. Driving the engine bringing Santa to Shipyard Park was none other than Select Board member and Fire Department Captain Jordan Collyer.

            Santa climbed down into the crowd of excited little children to take up his chair, accompanied by his wife, to hear the children’s biggest wishes. (Mr. and Mrs. Claus were played by real-life marital partners Milton and Catherine Heuberger. Mrs. Claus by day is the well-known town clerk.)

            In the big tent placed on the lawn of the historic park, the food aromas whetted many an appetite with food being spooned out to waiting plates by Select Board members Tyler Macallister and Jodi Bauer. Also filling those plates to overflowing was Town Administrator Mike Lorenco.

            Back outside, picture opportunities abounded with the Christmas tree fully decorated by the students of Center School. On the little stars, children placed their innocent wishes with more than one noting love and peace. The really big Adirondack hosted many a pictorial memory, as parents raised their little ones onto the oversized chair.

            Walking around the park posing with families was a reindeer (Ashling McLoughlin), an elf (Jen Scott) and Frosty the Snowman (Brian Hiller.) While over in the gazebo, the Old Hammondtown Elementary School Band played traditional favorites.

            One of the prime movers in pulling together all the moving parts of such a large event was Christine Richards, assistant to Town Operations. Richards said, “We are lucky to have such generous businesses.” As for the work of putting on such an enormous party, she said, “Everyone pulled together a real team effort.”

            Many other Town Hall employees and municipal workers made the community party a big success, including the Harbormaster, Fire and Highway departments.

By Marilou Newell

Upcoming Events at the Elizabeth Taber Library

Saturday Storytimes!  Our next story time will be on Saturday, December 17. Play, read and create with us!

            Cookbook Swap, Thursday, December 15 from 4-6 pm. Trade in a gently used cookbook for one that’s new to you, and browse our unique collection of used cookbooks for sale. Light refreshments will be served.

            Holiday Book Sale indoors at the Library, Thursday, December 15 to Saturday, December 17. Find the perfect last-minute holiday gift; books, ETL T-shirts, puzzles, games & more!  All sales benefit the library.

            Build a Bear Workshop, Friday, December 30 from 4-5 pm. Limit 15 participants, call the library to sign up.  This workshop is not open to those who have participated in previous Build a Bear Workshop.

            Food drive to support the Marion Food Pantry. Support the Marion Food Pantry by dropping off donations of shelf-stable food, pet supplies or unopened hygiene and cleaning products to the Elizabeth Taber Library throughout November and December.

            For more information on the Elizabeth Taber Library, visit us at www.ElizabethTaberLibrary.org or call us at 508-748-1252.